As someone who has worked in the queer community for a long time, you need to be careful of the people who stretch the reality of scarcity in our community to fit their agendas of making money off of our community.
A major sign of snake oil salesmen is someone saying they are not just the best, but the only option. This is made more believable in marginalized communities, where we are genuinely seeing a lack in resources, but a lack is not the same as an emptiness. As someone who studies queer history, let me say this: queer people (and other marginalized groups) have been fighting to provide for each other and their future for much longer than you'd expect.
There are resources. They aren't always spread equally or easily accessible, but there are more resources than some people want you to believe.
Don't let less get mistranslated into absence. Generation after generation of queer people have fought to make sure there was something for us. Do not let someone disrespect this work by claiming they are the first and only queer person to do something. If someone claims to be a first or only, fact check that. While firsts deserve celebration, we should be grateful to live in a world where they are more rare than they used to be.
Pictured: A bonelord waiting for spooky times.
damn dude
If you're something else, maybe a Dating Shoes isn't right...?
Maybe I could interest you in a GamersShirt?
SWEET NEREVAR
We've been speaking about the abuses for months but it has to be corroborated by israelis for western news to report on it.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/07/29/palestinian-prisoners-israel-jails-abuse/
Palestinians recount deadly abuse in Israeli prisons: ‘It is Guantánamo’
One Palestinian inmate died with a ruptured spleen and broken ribs after being beaten by Israeli prison guards.
Another met an excruciating end because a chronic condition went untreated.
A third screamed for help for hours before dying.
The details of the prisoners’ deaths were recounted by eyewitnesses and corroborated by doctors from Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI), who sat in on autopsies, the findings of which were shared with families and obtained by The Washington Post. The three men are among at least 13 Palestinians from the West Bank and Israel to die in Israeli jails since Oct. 7, according to PHRI. An unknown number of prisoners from the Gaza Strip have also died.
...
The Post spoke to 11 former prisoners and half a dozen lawyers, examined court records and reviewed autopsy reports, revealing rampant, sometimes deadly violence and deprivation by Israeli prison authorities. While international attention and condemnation has focused on the plight of Gazan detainees — specifically at the notorious Sde Teiman military site — rights advocates say there is a deeper, systemic crisis in Israel’s penal system. “Violence is pervasive,” said Jessica Montell, executive director of the Israeli rights group HaMoked, which has worked for years with Palestinian inmates. “It’s very overcrowded. Every prisoner that we’ve met with has lost 30 pounds.” Tal Steiner, executive director of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel, attributes the abuses, in part, to an atmosphere of revenge in Israel following Hamas’s Oct. 7 assault. “It’s a combination of individual sentiments that are very negative and violent, of backing of the policymakers and of lack of accountability,” she said.
...
Khairy Hamad, 32, a prisoner in the same section, said Maari was kicked down a flight of about 15 metal stairs while handcuffed — a punishment for speaking back to guards during a room search as inmates were stripped and beaten. Hamad said he and his cellmates had been ordered to the ground floor and Maari landed about five yards away from him. He was conscious, he said, but bleeding from the head. Maari, too, was moved to isolation in Tora Bora. From the cell next door, 53-year-old lawyer Sariy Khourieh listened to him wail in pain for hours. “He was screaming all day and night,” Khourieh said. “I need a doctor,” he remembers him shouting, again and again. At 4 a.m., he finally fell silent. In the morning, Khourieh listened as the guards discovered the lifeless body and called a doctor. He heard them try to revive Maari with a defibrillator, then saw him taken out in a body bag. “In a modern society, things like this shouldn’t happen,” his brother said
...
One Palestinian prisoner was beaten in front of a judge as he joined a hearing via video link in November, according to his lawyer and court records reviewed by The Post. “We can hear now in the background cries of people being beaten,” the court minutes read. The shouts stopped when the judge intervened. “My nose is broken,” said the defendant, whose name was redacted in court records. “I ask that the hearing not end before they promise not to hit me.”
...
"Relatives help Muazzaz Obayat, released this month from Israeli detention, out of a wheelchair at a West Bank clinic. (Heidi Levine for The Washington Post)"
Muazzaz Obayat, 37, could barely walk when he left Ktzi’ot, in southern Israel, last week. He was arrested in the aftermath of Oct. 7 on suspicion of ties to Hamas, but no charges were ever brought against him. His curly black hair and beard were unkempt; his cheekbones jutted out, and his eyes were sunken. At a clinic in the West Bank town of Beit Jala where he was receiving medical care, he said he wasn’t sure how old he was or the ages of his five children. “I know nothing but imprisonment,” he said. Once an amateur bodybuilder, he said he’d lost more than 100 pounds in nine months. He whispered as he described a guard sexually assaulting him with a broom. His doctors said he was suffering from post-traumatic stress and malnutrition. “It is Guantánamo,” he said.
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